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May 2020, Week 5

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Subject:
From:
Charlotte Anderson <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 28 May 2020 12:34:19 +0000
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Dear Subscribers,

We would like to announce a new publication from the University of Minnesota Press, which we hope will be of interest.

Clocking Out
The Machinery of Life in 1960s Italian Cinema
Karen Pinkus

Receive a 20% discount online with code: CSL2020


https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9781517908553/clocking-out/

What can 1960s Italian cinema teach us about how to live and work today? Clocking Out challenges readers to think about labor, cinema, and machines as they are intertwined in complex ways in Italian cinema of the early ’60s. Drawing on critical theory and archival research, this book asks what kinds of fractures we might exploit for living otherwise, for resisting traditional narratives, and for anticapitalism.
Italy in the 1960s was a place where the mass-producing factory was the primary mode of understanding what it meant to work, but it was also a time when things might have gone another way. This thinking and living differently appears in the cracks, lapses, or moments of film. Clocking Out is organized into scenes from an obscure 1962 Italian comedy (Renzo e Luciana, from Boccaccio 70). Reconsidering the origins of paradigms such as clocking in and out, “society is a factory,” and the gendered division of labor, Karen Pinkus challenges readers to think through cinema, enabling us to see gaps and breakdowns in the postwar order. She focuses on the Olivetti typewriter company and a little-known film from an Italian anthology movie, thinking with cinema about the power of the Autonomia movement, the refusal to work, and the questions of wages, paternalism, and sexual difference.
Alternating microscopic attention to details and zooming outward, Pinkus examines rituals of production, automation, repetition, and fractures in a narrative of labor that begins in the 1960s and extends to the present—the age of the precariat, right-wing resentment, and nostalgia for an order that was probably never was.
Karen Pinkus is professor of Italian and comparative literature at Cornell University. Among her books are Bodily Regimes: Italian Advertising under Fascism, The Montesi Scandal: The Death of Wilma Montesi and the Birth of the Paparazzi in Fellini’s Rome, and Fuel: A Speculative Dictionary (Minnesota, 2016). She is editor of diacritics.
With all best wishes,

Combined Academic Publishers



University of Minnesota Press | March 2020 | 152pp | 9781517908553 | PB | £17.99*
*Price subject to change.


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